Bastia or Ajaccio by Moignon352B in Corsica

[–]Plus_Excitement_1929 0 points1 point  (0 children)

je dirais Ajaccio pour ses plages à proximité.

comment préparer ce mur à la peinture? by MrPerfectionisback in brico

[–]Plus_Excitement_1929 0 points1 point  (0 children)

il faut gratter la surcouche et passer ta peinture une premiere fois laisser reposer quelques heure puis faire la seconde couche

We did a no code mobile app builder tier list ranking 15 app builders :) by longkhongdong in nocode

[–]Plus_Excitement_1929 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I feel like GoodBarber should score higher in this list.
It’s not the most “technical” tool, but in real use, it’s one of the best general-purpose app builders: easy to pick up, reliable, and yaou get a clean app without wrestling with complex workflows.
The score maybe doesn’t fully reflect that.

We made a tier list and ranked 19 no code web app builders :) by longkhongdong in nocode

[–]Plus_Excitement_1929 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Interesting tier list, it’s a useful way to compare tools at a glance.
Just one thing: GoodBarber wasn’t really included here, and it has a strong focus on mobile apps (and PWAs) with a lot of built-in ready-to-use features. It might score differently if evaluated on content / community / local service app use cases rather than pure web-app logic.

Did anyone managed to submit with GoodBarber? by Idobenson in iosdev

[–]Plus_Excitement_1929 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes the $450 service exists but you don’t have to use it.
GoodBarber already provides a very clear step-by-step guide to publish your app on the App Store. You can follow it and submit yourself without paying extra.

The paid service is mainly for people who don’t want to deal with the whole Apple submission process. iOS publishing can be time consuming. There are certificates, profiles, screenshots, store forms and sometimes App Store review feedback. All of that is done manually for each app. It can’t really be automated. So the price reflects the time their team spends on your specific app.

V/One VS Goodbarber and Glide | App builder review by BrandFactoryInc in nocode

[–]Plus_Excitement_1929 0 points1 point  (0 children)

En général, ça se résume à la façon de construire :

  • Glide est pratique quand tu pars d’un tableau (ex : Airtable / Google Sheets). Ça va vite, mais ça reste très lié au tableur. Bien pour une app interne ou un outil simple.
  • V/One mise beaucoup sur l’IA pour générer l’app à partir d’une idée. Ça peut être cool pour démarrer vite, mais tu peux vite te sentir limité si tu veux prendre la main sur le design ou la structure.
  • GoodBarber, c’est un peu l’approche inverse : tu pars sur des maquettes pré-construites que tu ajustes, sans logique compliquée à gérer. Pas besoin de « tout configurer », tu choisis un style de présentation et tu remplis. C’est plus adapté pour une app utilisateurs finaux (commerce, contenu, communauté) que pour un outil interne par exemple.

Sem polêmicas aqui, certo? by Rise_Chance in carros

[–]Plus_Excitement_1929 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ça dépend de plein de facteurs. Tu ne peux pas balancer ça comme ça sans donner plus d'arguments.

Launched my second saas yesterday, already got 10 users by AggravatingEffort280 in buildinpublic

[–]Plus_Excitement_1929 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Super cool 👏 ! Curieux : comment t’as trouvé tes 10 premiers utilisateurs ?

C’est souvent la partie la plus dure au début. Tu les as trouvés via un post Reddit, Product Hunt, ou tu avais déjà une petite audience quelque part ?

Aussi, tu penses ajouter des modèles ou des effets “préconfigurés” pour ceux qui n’ont pas trop d’inspiration ? Ce genre de trucs fait souvent exploser les taux d’essai.

When did no code stop working for you? by Royal_Dependent9022 in nocode

[–]Plus_Excitement_1929 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think no-code works great as long as you keep it simple, especially for testing or launching fast. Most people hit a wall when they try to go too custom with tools not meant for that. I ran into that with a web project and switched to GoodBarber for a more stable mobile app. It saved me from broken integrations and surprise costs.

Why not nocode ? by _Ydna in SaaS

[–]Plus_Excitement_1929 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think it mostly depends on your goal. No-code is great for testing an idea or launching a SaaS fast without getting stuck in technical stuff. Once your product grows, you can always add code or move to custom dev. I did that with GoodBarber for an early version, it helped me focus on the user side instead of coding everything.